(^14) | September 23, 2019
GWHS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION / TAMMY ARAMIAN (3)
Unfortunately,
few on either
side have
taken stock
of earlier
arguments
over the
murals’
meaning.
long fight over Life of Washington exposes a gaping deficit
in historical thinking—one that has infected contempo-
rary political discourse and impoverished our capacity to
think beyond spectacle.
C
ulture wars make for strange bedfellows.
Conservative New York Times columnist Bari
Weiss joined with progressives like Aijaz Ahmad,
Wendy Brown, Judith Butler, Roxanne Dun-
bar-Ortiz, and Adolph Reed in defending Arnaut-
off’s work. The right sees the attack on Life of Washington
as the latest skirmish in the left’s war on America and
its symbols and traditions. Victor Davis Hanson, a his-
torian affiliated with the right-wing Hoover Institution
at Stanford University, penned an op-ed for the Chicago
Tribune that linked the murals’ impending erasure to
several attacks on America by liberals, from comments by
Representative Ilhan Omar and soccer star Megan Rapi-
noe to the toppling of Confederate statues. He warned,
“If progressives and socialists can at last convince the
American public that their country was always hopelessly
flawed, they can gain power to remake it based on their
own interests.... We’ve seen something like this fight
before, in 1861—and it didn’t end well.”
The Civil War didn’t end well?! The abolition of
formal chattel slavery? The 13th, 14th, and 15th amend-
ments to the Constitution and the boldest attempt to
extend democracy to all Americans before the 1960s?
True, Reconstruction certainly did not end well, with
the planter class and New South industrialists regaining
power and installing the Jim Crow racial regime. But
it took over three decades of white terrorism, political
assassination, lynching, disfranchisement, and federal
complicity to crush what W.E.B. Du Bois called “the
abolition democracy.” For landlords and capitalists, that
ended pretty well. They celebrated by erecting monu-
ments to Confederate war heroes and promoting D.W.
Griffith’s cinematic adoration of the Ku Klux Klan, Birth
of a Nation. They employed art to invent myths, turning
terrorists and slaveholders into saviors and obliterating
traces of black struggles for social democracy.
Of course, Confederate monuments were not exactly
art. More often than not, they were mass-produced
statues installed for the purpose of erasing history and
declaring the rule of white supremacy. But it is also a
mistake to consider Arnautoff’s depiction of Washington
as the true and authentic history that students can read as
a counternarrative to the dominant story. Arnautoff did
not paint these murals so that future generations would
not forget the terrible parts of the past. While contem-
porary structural racism is rooted in the colonial era, the
link between past and present is not self-evident in the
murals—nor should it be. It is the responsibility of edu-
cators to make these connections, though judging from
arguments leveled on both sides of the debate, we’re not
doing a very good job. In a frequently quoted passage de-
fending the work, one George Washington High School
student wrote, “The fresco is a warning and reminder of
the fallibility of our hallowed leaders.”
Preservationists love this quote. The problem is that
it rests on the liberal claim that America created the
perfect union, but for a few flaws reflecting the found-
ers’ human fallibility. That 41 slaveholders signed the
Declaration of Independence is an unfortunate fact but
doesn’t sully that noble document. Recall a few years
ago when Democrats criticized Republicans for holding
public readings of the Constitution and skipping over
the “arcane” parts sanctioning slavery as a property right
and a basis for congressional representation and taxation.
Critics insisted that these politically uncomfortable pas-
sages should not be buried but acknowledged as evidence
of the greatness of the Constitution for rising above the
fallibility of its authors.
But slavery and dispossession were not errors or
anachronisms; they were the foundation upon which
American liberty was built. Kanye West had a point
(almost): Slavery was a choice. Not for the kidnapped
Africans but for the nation’s white settler class, the rulers
who in their quest for wealth accumulation faithfully
read their Plato and Aristotle for models of a slave own-
ers’ republic; treated their own mixed-race offspring as
property to be exploited, sold, or mortgaged; and drove
enslaved people to build their shining city on a hill on
the land and bodies of indigenous people. Lest we forget,
British prohibitions against colonists moving into Indian
territory west of the Appalachian Mountains was one of
the catalysts for independence.
Washington led a war and a nation with the goal of se-
curing liberty and equality for white men not because they
harbored some natural or irrational hatred for Africans
and Indians but because it was the only way to maintain
racial slavery and legally sanction dispossession in a settler
society based on liberal principles. Colonial landholders
had to manage kidnapped African labor, unruly inden-
tured white labor, and relations with sovereign and often
powerful indigenous communities. The planters’ inability
to police their workers and the frontier meant that white
servants and African slaves often escaped, sometimes to-
gether, finding refuge in swamps, hills, and among Native
peoples. Staving off the threat of what historian Peter
destroy Victor Arnautoff’s Depression-era mural series Life of Washington at
George Washington High School because it was deemed racist and demeaning.
Some students and educators—as well as school board officials, indigenous
groups, and various black and Latinx leaders—have singled out two of the mu-
rals, which show enslaved Africans and a disturbing image of a dead Indian. The
work’s critics argue not only that it depicts history from the colonizers’ perspec-
tive but also that such violent images are triggering. The school board’s decision
provoked a national campaign in defense of Arnautoff’s work, with proponents
citing First Amendment issues, the importance of historical memory, the failure
to grasp the radical intent behind the mural series, and the absurdity of spending
$600,000 that could have gone to fund arts education to destroy a work of art.
After dozens of editorials, blog posts, petitions, and weeks of rancorous
debate, the school board recently struck a compromise that would preserve
and digitize the murals but also shroud them behind removable covers. This
eminently reasonable solution, however, should not mark the end of what is
potentially a fruitful debate over how we interpret the past, who has the au-
thority to do so, and how liberal multiculturalism has shifted our response to
historical violence and exploitation. Unfortunately, few on either side of this
debate have taken stock of earlier contestations over the murals’ meaning,
which bear little resemblance to the current controversy. Looking back at the
Robin D.G. Kelley
teaches history
at UCLA and is
completing a book
on the journalist
Grace Halsell.
DON’T LOOK NOW!
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